Shovrim Shtika

Articles by Shovrim Shtika

We are the victimizers

News

by Mikhael Manekin of Breaking the Silence

Yesterday was the last day of our exhibition at Harvard. Over the past couple of weeks, we have heard many different responses to the exhibition. There is one particular response which was voiced frequently (even on this blog) that we feel we have to respond to. It seems that there are some who see us, Israeli soldiers, as victims of the Occupation. The saying goes as follows: “Occupation is bad: everyone suffers from it - Israelis and Palestinians alike”. This is a dangerous path which we at Breaking the Silence wish not to walk on. While we do put a focus on the institutional problems of the Occupation, and while it is important for us to make clear that abuse is inherent to the Occupation, we must, as adults who served in the military, accept full responsibility for the actions we committed. While we do not see ourselves as rotten apples, but as representatives of a morally corrupt system – we have to be clear: we were not victims, but the victimizers.

The purpose of the Breaking the Silence exhibition is to tell the story of the Occupation through our eyes, as soldiers who served in the Occupied Territories. The Occupation is first and foremost the story of the subjugation of the Palestinian people under military control. It is collective, regardless of weather or not the specific Palestinian was involved in an act against Israel. This is manifested in a daily humiliation through checkpoints, and of 18 year olds with minimal training in charge of many aspects of Palestinians’ lives. It is the suffering played out by countless house arrests, and of lack of basic human rights and dignity. And we as soldiers made sure that this system worked day in and day out.

When we got off from our service for weekends, we came home and lived regular lives. We had running water and electricity, and the freedom to go wherever we pleased. We were never under curfew, and never had the real fear of a foreign army entering our houses in the middle of the night.

While there is definitely a moral price Israel is paying, Israel is the one deciding to pay that moral price. We were not the victims. We were, and our society still is, a victimizing society.

Breaking the Silence is calling the system and ourselves what we really are. We believe the system of Occupation is a morally corrupting and dehumanizing system.

It is important to look at everyone in the Israeli Palestinian conflict as human beings. But there are not to equal sides here. Israel is the stronger side

Breaking the Silence will continue to spread this message, inside Israel and around the world, until the price of the Occupation is understood. Even when terrorist attack us, we must think and rethink our moral boundaries as a society.

David, veteran of the First Lebanon War: Israel has an existential issue it must address

Participants

Disclaimer: The opinions shown here do not represent the views of Shovrim Shtika/Breaking the Silence or that of its speakers. The opinions here belong to the individuals who voluntarily contributed these video clips.

Trevor: Revealed the complexity of the conflict

Participants

Disclaimer: The opinions shown here do not represent the views of Shovrim Shtika/Breaking the Silence or that of its speakers. The opinions here belong to the individuals who voluntarily contributed these video clips.

Wendy: So sad to see the gradual dehumanization of these soldiers

Participants

Disclaimer: The opinions shown here do not represent the views of Shovrim Shtika/Breaking the Silence or that of its speakers. The opinions here belong to the individuals who voluntarily contributed these video clips.

Another Israeli voice: Happy to see this in Israel, believe it should be here too

Participants

Disclaimer: The opinions shown here do not represent the views of Shovrim Shtika/Breaking the Silence or that of its speakers. The opinions here belong to the individuals who voluntarily contributed these video clips.

Joseph: In every occupation, these things happen

Participants

Disclaimer: The opinions shown here do not represent the views of Shovrim Shtika/Breaking the Silence or that of its speakers. The opinions here belong to the individuals who voluntarily contributed these video clips.

Marion: Creating a crisis for Israeli democracy

Participants

Disclaimer: The opinions shown here do not represent the views of Shovrim Shtika/Breaking the Silence or that of its speakers. The opinions here belong to the individuals who voluntarily contributed these video clips.

Polly: Under the same conditions, I would also do terrible things

Participants

Polly is involved in the Quaker community and came to see the exhibit in Boston. What she took away from the exhibit is an incredibly personal belief that were she to also be stationed in the occupied territories, she would also do things she would later regret. I feel this is a very humble and important statement to make. Some people want to believe that they would not succumb to the numbness described by Oded and Dotan, which I suppose they are welcome to hope. Except that there is no way of telling for sure and that we can only rely on the advice of people who have served to tell us.

Listen to Polly’s moving testimonial here:

Disclaimer: The opinions shown here do not represent the views of Shovrim Shtika/Breaking the Silence or that of its speakers. The opinions here belong to the individuals who voluntarily contributed these video clips.

Video of Oded Naaman concluding a tour

Testimonies

In this video, Oded Naaman explains the photos of corpses of terrorists (and why they shouldn’t be shocking), relates the confusion of serving in full-protective gear near children’s playgrounds, and finally the most important part of the exhibit: the wall of portraits of Israeli soldiers.

Here is what he says as he concludes his tour:

It’s not that simple to do what’s right or to defend yourself. And there is a price that I was never told about before I got there. And I want you to know that. That there’s a price. And whatever you think we should do, you have to incorporate this price into your consideration. Because this is my society you’re talking about.

…I felt like I was throwing away all the values of my country, while defending my country. This is an existential threat to Israel.

Click play below to hear this part of his tour yourself:

Another participant: Exhibit gives him hope despite the depressing subject material

Participants

This Jewish participant from Philadelphia caught the complexity of the conflict and particularly the view from inside the Israeli Defense Forces. Listen to his whole testimony here:

Disclaimer: The opinions shown here do not represent the views of Shovrim Shtika/Breaking the Silence or that of its speakers. The opinions here belong to the individuals who voluntarily contributed these video clips.